Israel's
Illegal Annexation of East Jerusalem
by Stephen Lendman
So says a confidential EU report revealed on March 7 by The London
Guardian's Rory McCarthy. It accuses Israel "of using settlement
expansion, house demolitions, discriminatory housing policies and
the West Bank (Separation) barrier as a way of 'actively pursuing
the illegal annexation' of East Jerusalem." More still, including
restrictive permits, "closure of Palestinian institutions," and
various other ways to "increase Jewish presence in" the city,
"impede Palestinian urban development, and separate East Jerusalem
from the rest of the West Bank" incrementally to annex it.
It says plans are now accelerated and have undermined the
Palestinian Authority's (PA) credibility as well as weakened
support for peace. It calls "Israel's actions in and around
Jerusalem....one of the most acute challenges to
Israeli-Palestinian peace-making (yet) have limited security
justifications." In addition, they're illegal.
Israel dismissed the criticisms as "a disinformation campaign" and
claimed that "mayor Nir Barkat continues to promote investments in
infrastructure, construction and education in East Jerusalem, while
at the same time upholding the law throughout West and East
Jerusalem equally without bias." Those comments, of course, have no
basis in fact nor do any from Israeli officials with regard to
Palestinians.
The EU report cites Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention that
prohibits "Individual or mass forcible transfers, as well as
deportations of protected persons from occupied territory...."
Neither shall "The Occupying Power....deport or transfer parts of
its own civilian population into the territory it occupies." In
addition, numerous UN resolutions established "no legal validity"
for settlement building or for East Jerusalem's annexation.
Yet settlement expansions continue at a "rapid pace" - in the past
year alone with nearly 5500 new units submitted for public review,
3000 of which have been approved. Through yearend 2008, they number
in total around 470,000, including 190,000 in Arab East
Jerusalem.
Of particular concern are "settlements inside the Old City, where
there were plans (for) 35 housing units in the Muslim quarter, as
well as (more) for Silwan, just outside the Old City walls" - the
idea being to connect East Jerusalem with Old City settlements,
then "sever" them from the West Bank.
The Guardian's McCarthy states:
"There are plans for 3500 housing units, an industrial park, two
police stations and other infrastructure in a controversial area
known as E1, between East Jerusalem and the West Bank settlement of
Ma'ale Adumin, home to 31,000 settlers." The EU report called
Israeli E1 measures "one of the most significant challenges to
the....peace process."
Israel responded as expected - that it's "committed to the
continued development of the city for the benefits of all its
population," and that East Jerusalem Palestinians are better off
than those in the West Bank," according to Olmert spokesman, Mark
Regev. The EU clearly disagrees. So do human rights activists and
Palestinians throughout the Territories living under an oppressive
military occupation where international laws are debased so none of
their rights are observed.
More from the "EU Heads of Mission Report on East Jerusalem"
No longer confidential, the reports documents numerous abuses in
spite of Israeli denials to the contrary. Besides the above:
In October 2008, a new
synagogue was inaugurated "in the immediate vicinity of the Haram
Al Sharif/Temple Mount" raising Palestinian concerns about Israel's
plans to take over the sanctuary as extremist settlers are
promoting;
The recent "Mufti's Grove" confiscation of 29 dunums (around seven
acres) for settler development;
Increased settler incursions into the Haram Al Sharif on the Temple
Mount, at times protected by Israeli security forces;
Palestinian properties are being targeted and families evicted from
their homes;
Provocative settlement expansions are continuing "in the heart of
the Palestinian population;"
Palestinian urban development is being impeded "by depriving East
Jerusalem of most of the still vacant areas available for economic
and demographic growth;"
Land is being confiscated for road construction;
The Separation Wall and "permit regime" cause "serious
humanitarian, social and economic impact on Palestinian life;" in
addition, 86% of it is on stolen land inside the Green Line; "the
Wall in the Jerusalem area de facto annexes 3.9% of the West Bank"
and extends Israel's border illegally; by including "illegal
settlements, (the Wall) cuts off 285,000 Palestinians," including
East Jerusalem, from the West Bank creating enormous hardships as a
result;
As more of the Wall is completed, "the checkpoint and permit regime
imposed on West Bankers is being tightened;" only around 20% of
farmers have permits for their land; the impact on their lives is
"serious;" once the Wall is completed, it's "estimated that 35,000
Palestinians will need permits for their own homes" with no
assurance they'll get them;
East Jerusalem's Al Quds University's Beit Hanina Campus is also
affected; it reports a 70% drop in students;
Fewer Palestinian Christians and Muslims have access to religious
sites;
West Bank and East Jerusalem economies have declined with customers
cut off from markets and services;
East Jerusalem hospitals providing specialist healthcare face
"increasing difficulties providing services for (West Bank)
patients" who can't access it without permits;
East Jerusalemities get miniscule budgets that greatly restrict
essential public services - "in sharp contrast to areas where
Israelis live both in West Jerusalem and East Jerusalem
settlements;"
Severe municipality restrictions impede "the building of
Palestinian housing in East Jerusalem;" very few permits are issued
for it;
"since Israel annexed East Jerusalem, more than 35% of its
territory has been expropriated (more than 24 sq. km);" of the
remainder, much is unzoned and off limits for construction; even in
zoned areas, "development has been artificially 'capped,' leaving
only 12% of East Jerusalem (mostly originally Palestinian owned
land) for Palestinian residential purposes;"
Building anywhere without permits means likely demolition, but
getting one is onerous; authorities issue fewer than 200 a year,
and "even these require a wait of several years and are usually a
costly affair;"
Various other obstacles and restrictions make life for East
Jerusalem Palestinians difficult to impossible, yet Israel finds
new ways of imposing them.